1. Covid-19 has challenged the view of dense cities as virtuous centers of economic activity, with density now seen as enabling virus spread. This has implications for how peripheral areas are viewed.
2. The document discusses both opportunities and challenges for peripheral areas from Covid-19 in the short and long-term. Opportunities include increased demand for outdoor and rural living spaces, while challenges involve weaker local economies and lack of infrastructure in peripheries.
3. There is uncertainty around how much individual preferences and behaviors may permanently change in ways that impact demand for urban vs. peripheral living. Increased acceptance of remote work and education could expand housing options but structural issues in peripheries remain a hindrance.
2. 2
“The density and connectedness of urban areas, once
viewed as key economic strength, now appear as
weaknesses… Distancing is the new mantra” (Fitjar,
2020)
“The idea of dense cities as a virtuous form of social
and economic order is a central idea in the broad
field of regional studies…repeated face-to-face
contact is help up as a superior means to share new
and hard-to-codify ideas…Covid-19 has challenged
this logic”
(Bailey et al., 2020)
3. 3
Before Covid19…
▪ Many researchers were already saying the situation had to
change…
▪ …new place-sensitive policies were needed
▪ …I often talked about the Italian experience of the National
Strategy for Inner Areas, not as a “perfect” solution, but as a
good starting point and to raise awareness of the “peripheral
areas” issue
▪ So, now the real question is:
▪ Is Covid19 helping or hampering the re-launch of the
peripheries?
4. Covid-19 and peripheral areas
4
If you Google Covid-19 and «peripheral areas» (in English) you get
about 182,000 entries, if you Google Covid-19 and «aree interne»
(in Italian) you get about 732,000 entries (as of 21/08/2020).
This means:
A lot has already been said on the relationship between Covid-
19 and the peripheries
As all the “fast-growing” research topics, you can find
everything and the opposite of everything…
In Italy the topic is perceived as being particularly important
(So, yes, I have a bias…)
5. The “two faces” of Covid-19
5
OPPORTUNITIES for Peripheries (Centrifugal)
• Density and agglomeration favour the spread of the contagion (also
pollution linked to the diffusion of Covid-19)
• Housing market: if people spend more time at home they might prefer
larger houses with more outdoor space
• Higher value for natural amenities close by (quality of life) because of
possible mobility restrictions
• “Proximity” tourism and in less crowded places (mountains?)
• Working from home (WFH) might make peripheries more appealing (less
frequent commuting makes longer commuting more acceptable)
Some of the «most recurrent arguments» these days…
6. The “two faces” of Covid-19
6
CHALLENGES for Peripheries (Centripetal)
• Digital divide (and “digital” human capital): peripheries are not
equipped for teleworking
• Essential services: health and education are not adequate (older
population more likely to be severely affected by Covid-19)
• Weaker economic systems are more likely to suffer from the upcoming
economic downturn (companies and businesses filing for bankruptcy),
in general less employment opportunities
• Working from home (WFH) might make also cities more appealing (less
time spent commuting in traffic), more sustainable means of
transportation (e.g. cycleways…)
7. DEMAND
(Individual behavior)
SUPPLY
(Local economies)
SHORT-TERM
(During and in the
aftermath)
LONG-TERM
(After a final
solution is found:
vaccine?)
7
Can we make some order in the different issues???
The «great unknown»:
changes in preferences?
???????
Window of
opportunities (e.g. WFH,
proximity tourism…)
Survival of businesses
everywhere (supply chains,
subsidies to employment)
Structural challenges of
peripheries (e.g. digital
divide, essential services, WFH
vs. face-to-face)
8. 1. Window of opportunities (short-term demand)
Example 1: Italy “proximity tourism”
The first data available for Italy show that
93% of Italians stayed in Italy for their
holidays (25% near home)
After the lockdown, there was a real surge
in “less obvious” Italian tourism
destinations (peripheral, mountains) for at
least two reasons:
▪ Avoid crowds (social distancing) – effect:
creating crowds in unexpected places!
▪ Searching for something “unknown”8
Between 7,000
to 10,000
tourists daily on
the Gran Sasso
9. 2. Survival of businesses (short-term supply)
Example 2: Business failure rate in Italy
▪ In March, the Cerved Rating Agency published a report stating that 10% of Italian
businesses were “at risk” of default, with a higher rate in three key sectors: textile,
tourism and manufacturing.
▪ In July, ISTAT estimated that about 38,8% of Italian businesses are “at risk” (28.8%
total employment, 22.5% GDP). The risk increases for SMEs:
▪ Micro-businesses 40.6%
▪ Small 33.5%
▪ Medium 22.4%
▪ Large 18.8%
▪ The most-hit sectors: tourism, food, catering, entertainment, but also, indirectly, commerce
& manufacturing.9
10. 3. Structural problems
peripheries (long-term supply)
10
Example 3:
Digital divide in Italian Inner Areas
Even if we assume
businesses in the
peripheries will survive
– or even, in some
respects, benefit from
- the current situation,
there are structural
problems that need to
be solved to compete
with the center,
especially in a post-
Covid19 world.
Inner Areas
De Renzis, Faggian & Urso (2020)
11. 11
Example 4: Lack of «essential services»
Italian Inner Areas
From remote areas it takes over 40 minutes
to reach:
• an exhaustive range of secondary schools;
• at least a 1st level DEA hospital
• at least a ‘Silver - type’ railway station
From ultra remote over 75 minutes!
As Cotella and Vitale Brovarone (2020) point
out “if living in these conditions is hard for
those who resisted and keep struggling to
live there, the general idea of a migration of
urban dwellers in rural areas as of today
sounds at the very least naïve”.
We do need to keep on working seriously on
place-sensitive policies to make these places
appealing, not just for a short-break but for
living!
12. 4. Changes in individual preferences (long-term demand)
I left this “quadrant” last because – to me – it is the most interesting!
12
How much of our “current status” is here to stay?
Economists always talk about «individual preferences», how
much did Covid-19 change our preferences?
1. “Habit” and behaviour change;
2. Unveiling of new opportunities, expanding our choice set.
13. 1. “Habit” and behavior change
13
To understand how «habits» are formed and change, we need to look into
the behavioural economics and psychology literature.
• Van der Weiden et al. (2020, Frontiers in Psychology) point out that
“research on habit formation is still in its infancy”.
• Lally et al. (2010, European Journal of Social Psychology) find that it might
take anything between 18 to 254 days for a person to form a new habit,
with an average of 66 days (Note: as an example, the Italian lockdown
lasted from March 9th to May 18th…70 days!)
• There have been changes in: consumption, housing preferences…
14. 14
Spending patterns were not universal: different countries = different
priorities:
▪ In Italy: biggest increase in flour (+186,5%) and gloves (+263,7%); biggest drop in
make-up (-70%) and perfumes (-63,6%) (Nielsen, 2020)
▪ In the Netherlands: biggest increase in ice-cream, water and wine (GFK – Growth for
Knowledge, 2020)
▪ In Germany: biggest increase in cleaning wipes and soft drinks (GFK, 2020), drop in
make-up and perfumes like Italy
▪ In the USA: biggest increase in toilet paper (on March 12th 2020 the sales were up 734%
compared to the same day in 2019) and meat
BUT…
Changes in consumption
15. 15
• Thecurrent consumption patterns might be more revealing of longer-term
trends and real “habits formation”:
• Cleanliness and hygiene: major preoccupation, likely to “stick” for a while (“health
and care” economy) - Centripetal? (hospitals more central…)
• Fear of uncertainty (and incoming economic crisis): postpone non-essential
purchases (is the environment seen as essential by short-sighted people??),
increase savings – Centripetal? (weaker peripheral economies, tourism…)
• Online shopping increased (e.g. in the USA between 15 to 40% in all categories) –
Centrifugal? (no need for local businesses)
• “Cocooning”: spend more on at-homes solutions for, say, wellness and
entertainment (“homebody” economy, McKinsey, 2020) – Centrifugal? (no need
for cultural events, cinemas, theatres, gyms and so on…)
16. 16
Changes in housing preferences
Linked to my previous point on «cocooning»…housing.
Covid-19 has severely hit the housing sector! Probably the most
relevant centre vs. periphery issue.
Aside from thinking of short-term issues (plummeting construction
sector, support measures for tenants and homeowners…), the
question is:
“Are changes in housing preferences permanent
and implying relocation processes?”
17. 17
Evidence is building on the
fact that living priorities
have changed in light of
Covid-19 and, with these,
also the housing features
buyers are looking for.
E.g. recent survey of 1,300
respondents in the UK
(JLL, 2020) showed this…
https://residential.jll.co.uk/insights/research/has-covid-
19-altered-our-housing-needs
Not surprising! Centrifugal?
18. 18
2. Expanding “choice set”
Many individuals did not
consider “working from
home (WFH)” as being an
option, now this is an
alternative that became part
of their “choice set”
Moreover, they partially got
used to it, so now their
preferences have changed
(e.g. report in the UK)
https://residential.jll.co.uk/insights/research/has-covid-
19-altered-our-housing-needs
19. 19
Not only WFH, for younger people “attending University online” is also now a
possibility.
Rental accommodation in Italian towns with a University vocation shows that
many students are planning to attend classes remotely (now that they can!).
Compared to the same period in 2019, the availability of rental accommodation went up:
• +290% in Milan
• +270% in Bologna
• +180% in Padua
• +175% in Florence
• +130% in Roma
• +108% in Turin
These are the towns whose large
Universities attract many students
from other parts of Italy and/or
from abroad
Corriere della Sera, August 25th 2020
20. So…what is the «take-home message»?
1. Something really unprecedented…
I am sceptical of using the 2009 crisis to forecast the post Covid-19 world (more
fundamental behavioural changes this time). Need to use our intuition, knowledge,
common sense to build possible future “new” scenarios, also collaborating with
other disciplines (e.g. psychology…)
2. We are not going back to normal
Up until a month ago or so, there were researchers claiming that if the virus was
going away quickly, we were still “on time” to forget about it and go back to the
previous status quo. I believe now we have gone long enough, things have changed
for good. Compagnucci (2020) rightly points out that epidemics are also becoming
more frequent, so people now will adjust their behaviour to this possibility…
20
21. 4. We are seeing some patterns, but there is still a lot of uncertainty on how
much of the changes are here to stay
5. In particular, there is a lot of uncertainty on the final outcome of the
combination of centripetal and centrifugal forces we discussed. However:
a. It is important to avoid simplistic answers!!!
b. Cities will not die (some face-to-face contacts will always be important), not
everybody will move to the peripheries, but less frequent commuting means
longer commuting is more appealing…
c. There are opportunities for peripheral areas, but only those who can “grab”
them and provide appropriate infrastructures and services (and the economic
crisis will affect them most…inequalities???) will benefit. Place-sensitive
policies
21
Far from summarizing everything, let me just point out
I will illustrate these by looking at Italy as an example as it is the context I observed most in these months and that we, as a group, are currently studying.
Because of social distancing Richards (2020) estimates that Reduce torusim capacity by 52% Reduce revenue by 66%, e.g. The Leaning Tower of Pisa, a World Heritage site which usually attracts 5 million visitors a year, is only permitting 15 people in at a time. Visitors are requested to wear face masks and an electronic device that warns them if they are less than a metre from anyone else
Incentives not only to the supply but also to the demand (now in Italy bonus of 500€ to close the digital gap, 300€ computer, 200€ to get internet above 20Mbps, news of August 25th)
an exhaustive range of secondary schools;
at least a 1st level DEA hospital
Casualty departments, observation facilities, short stays, resuscitation and diagnostic-therapeutic general medical intervention, general surgery, orthopaedics and traumatology, cardiology intensive care. They are also able to provide chemical, clinical and microbiological laboratory services, medical imaging and carry out transfusions
at least a ‘Silver - type’ railway station (RFI)
Stations in Italy are classified Platinum-Gold-Silver or Bronze – Silver are “medium/small systems with an average degree of uptake for metropolitan/regional services and shorter long-distance journeys than GOLD” (DPS, 2014)
Note: from February 20th to August 27th (today) it is
There is the myth of 21 days, but it is a myth…
Pinate, Urso + USA prosociality under conditions of an existential threat. Willingness to Donate. In both countries, a substantial majority of survey respondents
were willing to forego some or all of their bonus money to make a contribution to collective welfare. In the U.S. 63% of survey participants chose to donate at least some of their bonus to a charity; in Italy 77% of participants made a donation. For those who chose to donate, the average donation amount in the U.S. was $2.75 (.55 of bonus fund) and in Italy €2.48 (.63 of bonus fund).
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/documents/4187653/10321612/Year+over+year+by+MSs+Q1+2020.jpg/989d59db-7ac7-70ac-241e-ee7f9fbabbaa?t=1596654900432 (accessed August 25th 2020)